Herbs From The Garden Can Heal
Your Outdoor Medicine Cabinet and
Pantry
April 11,
2009 John Stuart
Leslie
Generally speaking, an ‘Herb’ is a term used to
describe various types of plants in other than botanical nomenclature or ornamental uses. An
herb typically falls into one or more of these categories:

- Culinary: as a flavoring for cooking
as in spices, or in salads or garnishes;
·
M -
Medicinal: as a treatment for ailments by using various parts of the plant
or by distilling an active ingredient contained within its
parts;
- Aroma: The scents of various plants are derived
from the aromatic compounds contained in the plants. The fragrance can be experienced
directly from the natural form of the plant or from distillation and bottled for use as an
‘essential oil’.
-
Spiritual: Certain plants contain
compounds that create various intoxicating, hallucinogenic, psychic and other altered states
of consciousness. They historically were used in religious ceremonial uses and many are
considered poisonous.
As a garden design element, specific herbs would fit into a category that
is consistent with the purpose or intent of the particular garden space. The garden may have a
theme such as a kitchen garden in which many herbs and plants are
grown for the purpose of utilizing their parts in culinary
uses.
A garden could also be centered on the theme of
fragrance. The scents of many plants/herbs provide intense reaction that has mind- body- spirit
benefits. The scent of an herb such as Lavender for example is relaxing, calming, soothing.
Eucalyptus is stimulating. Some herbs can elicit emotional responses such as uplifting the spirit,
(countering depression), happiness and joy.

The sense of smell is one of our five senses
along with taste, touch, sight, sound. As we trigger any one of our senses, our bodies react in
myriad ways either in positive, negative or neutral response. Pungent or decaying smells are
offensive and tell our bodies to avoid, for they may make us nauseous. Other smells tell us not to
eat the plant as it may be poisonous. Others are beneficially fragrant and bring us a multitude of
benefits and we therefore welcome those smells.
Since plants can affect our other senses of
sight, sound, taste and touch, we can in turn create another theme based on the sensory input
created from the use of selected plants as a ‘Sensory
Garden’.
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Sensory gardens are often used in therapeutic
settings because of the various benefits that can be achieved for patients with different needs and
reactions. A good design however, will combine several aspects of the 5 senses to make the garden
an aesthetic creation as well.
Within the context of the ‘herb garden’ which
by now you can see can be quite broad once we parse all the aspects of plant uses, whether they be
for aesthetic or practical uses, we can look at individual plant species not so much as herbs, but
what we intend to use them for.
Let’s take Rosemary prostratus (Trailing
Rosemary) as an example. I may use it to drape over a low stone wall since it looks good in rock
gardens and stone textures. I may use it as a high mounding ground cover as foreground border in a
hot sunny exposure. It may be used as a solitary accent planting in a container outside my kitchen
door for use in cooking. It may be grown along the edge of patio entrance encouraged to creep into
the path so as to get crushed by footsteps and thereby releasing its aromatic scent. Lastly, I may
use it to provide something with a blue flower during the winter months.
You can see from this one example that plants
can have many uses. Since there are so many plants available in our designer’s palette, choosing
which ones are appropriate can be overwhelming. Narrowing down the purpose helps greatly, so the
concept of selecting a theme helps to sort out our choices. Especially if we wanted an herb garden
that attracted butterflies. In this case, we may not look at our garden as an herb garden that was
butterfly-friendly so much as a butterfly garden that happens to have some herb plants within
it.
So from a design perspective, what we call our
garden is very important, as it implies what the purpose and use will be, which then dictates the
entire design process and what the garden will look like.
A garden design however does not have to be
called a name or have a particular theme. Most ‘gardens’ do fit into some sort of theme however,
whereas when one calls their space their ‘yard’ or ‘backyard ‘landscaping’, a particular theme is
not necessarily implied. Thus the use of the term garden implies that some theme or special feeling
is intended.

An ‘Aromatherapy’ garden brings with it a
deeper level of meaning. Not just is it a garden with fragrance, but the grouping of scents and
aromas may be designed in such as way that brings about a specific emotional, mental or spiritual
response, i.e. is therapeutic. The grouping is like a cocktail drug, using several different
species to create the same end result. This end result may be some type of healing response. So
now, we have yet another theme: the Healing Garden….
I choose to separate the two types of gardens
into Healing Gardens and Aroma Gardens. I use Healing Gardens for specific uses where there is a
distinct need to heal something that has an ailment, is wounded in some way or is not in harmony,
or at ease, in dis-ease in some way.
To me, words are powerful. As thoughts are
things, words give power to the thought behind them. Stating that something is ‘healing’ gives
recognition and validity to the fact that something is wounded. This concept is congruent with my
belief that all gardens have a sacredness that if tapped, can be immensely beneficial to one’s self
in mind, body, and spirit. Why not call such gardens ‘Wellness Gardens’ or ‘Prosperity Gardens’? I
like prosperity gardens better, as 'wellness' has too much of a corporate
identification.
To declare that you are going to design and
build a healing garden or an aromatherapy garden does not necessarily mean that there is
something wrong with you, or that you need special treatment.
People are used to going to doctors,
holistic practitioners, physical therapists, massage therapists counselors etc. - all fitting
into the category of the ‘healing professions’. The system is designed to fix your problems
rather than prevent it. Preventative medicine is rare these days. Probably because it relies on
personal responsibility and the healing professional does not get paid to educate people as
much as they do in treating their ailments.
Being in and around a garden is great
preventative medicine, and as such, is therapeutic. Our minds, our thoughts are not always
running in a perfect mode. the garden can heal our thoughts, make us feel better, get our
thoughts figured out, come to decisions, all things we may otherwise seek out a professional to
assist.
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